Improved Risk Sentiment Continues But Newsflow On Syria Is Key

 | Apr 13, 2018 08:32

Market Overview

Although trade tensions continue to simmer on the backburner, traders have turned attention towards the potential conflict in Syria as a drive for the latest market knee jerk reactions. Risk-on or risk-off now seems to stem from Donald Trump and the potential for a US military response. Although Trump dialled back a touch yesterday, the pawns are being positioned and a response of some degree is still to be expected. It seems to be a matter now of when. Risk appetite has improved (just one look at the response on the gold chart over the past 48 hours will tell you how) whilst equities rebounded as the VIX volatility of S&P 500 options fell to a three week low back below 20.

The dollar has also had a rebound, but much of this move has been driven by a weaker yen but also crucially a weaker euro. The ECB minutes from the March meeting reflected a concern on the Governing Council over trade disputes but also how euro volatility could prevent both growth and inflation picking up. This dovish tilt questions the inflation mandated central bank’s ability to end its asset purchase program in the second half of the year. This move drove downside breaks on forex major crosses such as EUR/GBP and EUR/NZD. As we come into Friday the 13th, there is a continuation of the improved risk feel to market moves.

The huge surprise in China’s Trade Balance which actually posted a surprise deficit of -$5.0bn in March (surplus of +$27.1bn exp, surplus of +$33.8bn last month) is likely to have been mitigated by seasonal factors. China’s imports grew by +14.4% (+10.0% exp, up from +6.3% last month), whilst China’s exports posted a surprise -2.7% (+10.0% exp, down from 44.5% last month).

Wall Street closed in positive territory last night with the S&P 500 +0.8% at 2664 whilst S&P futures are all but flat this morning. Asian markets were mixed to positive (Nikkei +0.5%) overnight with European indices similar in early moves.

In forex the yen remains a key underperformer amidst the improved risk sentiment, but also the commodity currencies of the Aussie and Kiwi are performing well as Chinese imports surprised to the upside overnight.

In commodities the gold price has found some support overnight, trading around $2 higher, whilst oil has started the day with consolidation.

It is a relatively quiet end to the week for European data, with US data coming in the form of the prelim reading of the University of Michigan Sentiment at 15:00 BST which is expected to drop back slightly to a still very strong 100.5 (from a revised lower 101.6 last month).

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The US JOLTS jobs openings are at 15:00 BST and are expected to drop slightly to 6.17m from 6.31m last month.

Chart of the Day – EUR/GBP

With the euro under pressure and sterling remaining strong yesterday we saw a huge support broken on EUR/GBP. For around eight months the pair has been trading in a range broadly around £0.8700/£0.9000. Aside from a couple of minor intraday breaches over the months, the closing low has been £0.8710 back in January. However, a huge bear candle formed yesterday (which was the most significant bear candle since January) to close at £0.8660 and complete a break to a new low dating back to June 2017. The question is whether this is a decisive breakdown that completely changes the medium to longer term outlook, or whether this will be a false break. Certainly the near term momentum indicators remain negatively configured also with downside potential on the Stochastics. The RSI is though looking stretched near term around 30. Today’s session could be key to the break, with an initial consolidation suggesting the market considering the options. A confirmed downside break on a closing basis implies around 300 pips of downside over the coming months and unless a decisive rally can be put together the technical outlook looks significantly more negative now medium term. There is also a strong band of overhead supply between £0.8700/£0.8800 for rallies to be sold into. This will remain the case now whilst the resistance at £0.8800 remains in place.